Johnson Timothy P, Feeney Mary K, Jung Heyjie, Frandell Ashlee, Caldarulo Mattia, Michalegko Lesley, Islam Shaika, Welch Eric W
Department of Public Administration, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL USA.
Center for Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Studies, School of Public Affairs, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ USA.
Humanit Soc Sci Commun. 2021;8(1):146. doi: 10.1057/s41599-021-00823-9. Epub 2021 Jun 17.
Much of the available evidence regarding COVID-19 effects on the scientific community in the U.S. is anecdotal and non-representative. We report findings from a based survey of university-based biologists, biochemists, and civil and environmental engineers regarding negative and positive COVID-19 impacts, respondent contributions to addressing the pandemic, and their opinions regarding COVID-19 research policies. The most common negative impact was university closures, cited by 93% of all scientists. Significant subgroup differences emerged, with higher proportions of women, assistant professors, and scientists at institutions located in COVID-19 "hotspot" counties reporting difficulties concentrating on research. Assistant professors additionally reported facing more unanticipated childcare responsibilities. Approximately half of the sample also reported one or more positive COVID-19 impacts, suggesting the importance of developing a better understanding of the complete range of impacts across all fields of science. Regarding COVID-19 relevant public policy, findings suggest divergence of opinion concerning surveillance technologies and the need to alter federal approval processes for new tests and vaccines.
关于新冠疫情对美国科学界影响的现有证据大多是传闻且不具代表性。我们报告了一项针对大学的生物学家、生物化学家以及土木和环境工程师的基线调查结果,内容涉及新冠疫情的负面和正面影响、受访者对应对疫情的贡献以及他们对新冠疫情研究政策的看法。最常见的负面影响是大学关闭,93%的科学家都提到了这一点。出现了显著的亚组差异,在新冠疫情“热点”县的机构中,女性、助理教授和科学家报告难以集中精力进行研究的比例更高。助理教授还报告面临更多意外的育儿责任。大约一半的样本还报告了新冠疫情的一个或多个积极影响,这表明更好地了解所有科学领域的完整影响范围非常重要。关于与新冠疫情相关的公共政策,调查结果表明在监测技术以及改变新测试和疫苗的联邦审批程序的必要性方面存在意见分歧。